Abstract

During disaster relief reconstructions, prefabricated temporary houses (PTHs) have been extensively used for resettling disaster victims. However, due to the nature of disaster relief, PTHs are normally light-weighted, without an electrical thermal environmental control systems installed. Hence, the thermal environments inside these PTHs can become intolerably hot in summer. Therefore, simple and low cost measures should be applied to disaster-relief PTHs for improving their indoor thermal environments. In this paper, an experimental study on applying PCMs to disaster-relief PTHs is reported. Two different designs of applying PCMs were examined. In Design 1, PCMs were fixed to the internal surfaces of a model PTH and the related experimental results demonstrated that both indoor air temperature and internal surface temperature of the model PTH can be reduced at daytime. However, in Design 2, a movable PCM based energy storage system (PESS) was used and the related experimental results suggested the use of the mobile PESS with a total charge of 148.8 kg PCM helped reduce the average indoor air temperature by 3.2–3.6 °C. The experimental results from both Designs suggested that, due to the nature of disaster relief and since outdoor air at a lower temperature may be the only cooling energy source for charging the PCM, a movable PESS system was preferred, so that it can be moved to outdoor at nighttime for being charged with more cooling energy using lower temperature outdoor air not adversely increasing the air temperature inside PTHs.

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